Waterhemp Control Requires Change In Mindset
COLUMBIA, MO.
In the war between waterhemp and producers,
waterhemp is winning, says a University
of Missouri Extension state weed scientist.
“As I drive around, I’d have to say that we’re
not there yet,” said Kevin Bradley, who discussed
waterhemp at the recent MU Crop Management
Conference in Columbia. “I think we
are doing better, but waterhemp is our driver
weed. We pretty much make every decision on
that one weed.”
Bradley, who is also an associate professor of
plant sciences in the MU College of Agriculture,
Food and Natural Resources, says the problems
with waterhemp go far beyond glyphosate resistance.
“If you’ve just got glyphosate-resistant waterhemp,
you should consider yourself lucky,”
Bradley said. “We’re seeing waterhemp with
multiple resistance to all the other herbicides
that we would use to control glyphosate-resistant
waterhemp, so we have fewer options and
it is much more costly to control.”
A different mindset when it comes to weed
control is needed, Bradley says. Producers can
no longer rely on the simplicity of a glyphosate
system.
“It was simple, it was easy, it controlled everything,
and now that is just simply not the case
at all,” he said. “As I look into the future, we’re
going to get more complex with our weed management.
It is not going to get simpler.”
Controlling waterhemp will require more
proactive management, spraying much smaller
weeds, and rotating to herbicides with different
modes of action.
Bradley says understanding the biology of waterhemp
and identifying its strengths and weaknesses
is important. And its strengths are
formidable: Waterhemp produces on average
300,000 seeds per plant, grows an inch and a
half a day during the height of the growing season,
and has evolved resistance to just about
every herbicide ever sprayed on it.
“We can name strengths all day long. That’s
the hard part about waterhemp; it has so many
things that enable it to survive,” Bradley said.
“But more important are the weaknesses, and
waterhemp has two as I see it.
“Number one, waterhemp seed is relatively
short-lived in the soil – four or five years. If
you’ve kept waterhemp from producing seed
and returning seed back onto that land for four
years, you are probably going to virtually eliminate
waterhemp from your fields.”
The second weakness Bradley cites is that waterhemp
seed does not emerge from low soil
depths. He doesn’t recommend it to every
grower in every place, but where appropriate,
deep tillage can bury that seed and it will not
come up.
“In addition to understanding the biology of
waterhemp, if we can rotate to multiple modes
of action I think we can really get a handle on
this problem,” Bradley said.
For more information, see the MU Extension
publication “Management of Glyphosate-Resistant
Waterhemp in Corn and Soybean”
(IPM1030), available for free download at
www.extension.missouri.edu/IPM1030. Δ